Paul
objective: viewed from the third person, perceptible by all observers.
subjective: viewed from the first person
private experience: only perceptible by one observer (me)
I'm happy with these definitions, but I have a question:
Q1) Is there difference between "subjective" and "private experience", and if so what is it?
Q2) In your definition of "Physical" you refer to "subjective experiences". So we have no less than FOUR terms here:
"Subjective", "private experiences", "certain subjective experiences" (from your definition of "mental").
I'm not at all clear whether these are supposed to be four different things, or four different names for the same thing. Could you clarify? For me, all four are the same thing. You have four terms where I only have one. Do you really need four or can some of them be eliminated?
So far we don't have usable definitions for the other things.
qualia: (undefined, presumed has no referent) (NB: Sure it's not one of the four above?)
mental: (tentative) A term used to circumscribe certain subjective experiences.
But the real problem is with "physical". So far you've suggested:
Physical : (tentative) A term used to circumscribe certain subjective experiences.
Does not mean : "observable by everyone"
Does not mean : "observable now"
(tentative) "observable in principle."
This isn't anything like clear enough for me to use it in a proof. Since it is physicalism you are supposed to be defending, surely it should be pretty straightforward to define "physical"?
"I do not know how to apply the word physical to concepts."
This is a startling statement from a person who got really p*ss*d at hammegk for claiming that physicalists didn't understand their own position. You sound like you don't know what "physical" means. This is a claim I have been making for years: physicalists don't understand what "physical" is.
I would say that any subjective experience is objective to some degree. I can describe the experience to a certain level, and other people can understand it objectively to that level. Whether I can describe the entire experience is open to question. In any event, this does not mean that the other people can experience my experience, only that they can understand it intellectually.
I'm not going to analyse this till I have a set of definitions we can both use.
Geoff